Brigitte Pellerin

Brigitte Pellerin

Parliamentary Bureau

Brigitte Pellerin was born in Quebec City a few weeks after the October crisis. After a career path from flipping burgers to selling shoes to waiting tables to running retail stores, she received a 7th degree in music (piano) from Laval in 1985 and a law degree (ll.b) from the same institution in 1996. And then became a writer. Prior to her arrival at Sun Media and the Sun News Network, her articles and columns appeared in many Canadian newspapers as well as magazines such as Western Standard and Reader’s Digest, and webzines like Le Quebecois Libre, Mercatornet.com and C2C: Canada’s Journal of Ideas. Her books include Epitre aux tartempions: Petit pied de nez aux revolutionnaires de salon, Le National-syndicalisme and Down the Road Never Travelled.

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Columns

The Supreme Court of Canada on Monday will hear arguments about whether or not a relatively easy to obtain general warrant is enough for police to seize the content of your text messages from your service provider.

Patrick Brazeau's alleged victim says the aboriginal senator hit her arms, put a hand around her neck, pushed her down the stairs, spat in her face and touched her in an aggressively sexual way, court documents obtained by QMI Agency show.

Canadian officials are warning against all travel to Libya, particularly the Benghazi region, and urging all Canadian citizens to leave the area due to the possibility of terrorist attacks against Westerners.

Since she agreed to meet with Liberal leadership hopeful Justin Trudeau, Indian Affairs Minister John Duncan is hoping hunger-striking Attawapiskat Chief Theresa Spence will reconsider his offer to meet with him.

Liberal leadership hopeful Justin Trudeau was only half right when he invoked Wilfrid Laurier during his closely watched speech to the Reviving the Islamic Spirit conference in Toronto, an expert on Laurier said Sunday.

The Supreme Court has ruled that a British Columbia man who tried to circumcise his 4-year-old son on the kitchen floor of his house is guilty of criminal negligence causing bodily harm, aggravated assault and assault with a weapon.

The Supreme Court of Canada on Tuesday looked into the issue of judicial plagiarism in a case involving the family of a child who suffered brain damage during birth at the British Columbia Women's Hospital and Health Centre in 2001.